Did you recently take on (or consider) a loan of 84 months or longer on a car purchase?
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Secondly, coming from my experience as an Emergency Medical Technitian, I don't like the idea of passengers that don't have a way of entering/exiting the vehicle easily. Add to that the fact that most (notice I say most, not all)of these vehicles don't have the rear crash-worthiness for even the middle row passengers to be safe much less passengers that are within a couple of inches of the rear hatch. Depending on the model, some don't even have 3pt seatbelts for all passenger seating positions.
This is a different matter for most full-size sport-utes as you have much more space between the rear seat and the rear hatch and more room in general along with access to the rear seats.
Just my $.02, and each is entitled to their own opinion.
Ken
If your needs are such that you need to transport more than 5 people, get over your vanity and get a minivan or step up and get something that was designed to handle a crowd like the Sequoia or Suburban.
For pete's sake, I'll add my vote to either bite the bullet and get a full-sized SUV or get a minivan.
Ken
Ken
I just purchased a new 4Runner and unfortunately it did not have a security system. The dealership told me the engine imobilizer will not let the car be started without the correct key. A local alarm shop told me the car can still be hotwired past the steering column where the chip is located so I still need their security system. Why would Toyota have added the imobilizer since that's how cars get stolen. I spoke with the dealership again and they said the chip is not in the steering column and the security system option is an alarm that will protect from break in and is a plug in module to the existing imobilizer($539). Does anyone know which is true? Thanks for your help!
I assume that with the 4 speed, the V6 is turning faster at highway speeds, soit might be above the ~170 lb.ft, but I can't imagine it is very near the V8 - even with its VVTi system. A bit of a remble, but the point is: "peak" power or milage ratings may be a long way from what you experience or make use of in real world driving.
It has been explained to me before that torque is what gets you going quicker and higher horsepower results in greater top end speeds. I'm not sure if that's true. If it is true, we could expect that the V8 would be quicker 0-60, but the V6 might have a higher max speed, all other things (weight, etc) being equal.
I imagine the 5 speed with the V8 also has a shorter first and probably second gears? That may make the initial accelleration better with that drivetrain than the 4 speed with the V6. It certainly sounds, however, that the V6 is more than adequate for the vehicle.
I'm still going over it with the wife, but if/when we end up getting one, it will be a V8 Limited. The heated seats are a must for her....
The only thing an alarm is going to give you is an audible alarm if the thing is broken into. This will keep the petty thieves from steeling your CD collection.
Hope this helps.
Ken
The big, fat key of the engine immobilizer is sufficient for most people because car theft is the primary concern. For some, the added benefit of an actual alarm is worth a few more bucks.
The real problem with audible auto alarms is that no one pays any attention to them. I am sure thieves know this.
Check it out using your panic button. See who does anything.
Steve, Host
When considering the V-6 vs. the V-8, I'm suprised I don't see any arguments for the V-6 citing the 4WD abilities (again see my intro if you have said it in this thread). In my opinion, when I heard that the V-8 was AWD and not a 4WD system that can be selected between 2WD, 4HI, and 4LO, I threw it out of my consideration instantly. I can't imagine trying to go offroad in an AWD vehicle and trust that the computer would make the same decisions as a true offroader would make when he/she could select the exact mode that they want. Does no one else have a problem with this? Since I live in So. Cal. I can't physically see a 4X4 4runner in any shape or form, but from what I can gather, the V-8 has only one setting, no? Or am I totally wrong and you can select a 4LO setting?
In the V6, when you shift into 4WD, you have put yourself into the same mode as the V8 is always in.
What is the double-decker cargo shelf exactly?
Is it literally a shelf that can be removed, and/or replaced with a piece of plywood costing $80 cheaper? Or is it something permanently attached to the wheel wells that raises and lowers? Does anyone have some experience with this option so far?
Last, I've got offers of about $1000 over invoice on a V-6 4WD Sport special order. Has anyone had better luck, or should I just stop trying?
Here's why I'm special ordering (warning complaints follow):
As I mentioned in my previous post, I'm living in
Southern california, and there are NO 4X4 4runners here. None is literal, not a few...none. To top it off, the only 4X4's I can find in the sport have added JBL, sunroof,... every other option that I don't want/need. All of these are found in Northern California btw. I think it is stupid to spend $3000 in options that you don't want in the first place. So, I am willing to wait the 3.5 to 4 months to get a car I really want, so I'm going to order the damn thing. Not that any of you care, but I'm sure that some were wondering why the hell I would special order a car, when there are plenty on the lots.
Again, thanks cliffy.
As for ordering, just to keep you informed, you can order a vehicle from Toyota, but there is NO guarantee that they will build it. For domestic built units, from my own personal experience it can take as long as 6 months to get the vehicle and again, no guarantees. I have NEVER had any luck ordering a vehicle built overseas but that does not mean that it can not be done. I wish you luck in your order in any regard.
Ken
Customers hate answers like that and within 6 weeks, they start asking "how close to my desired equipment can you get me one next week?" It always happens. That $3000 you didn't want to spend doesn't look so bad any more for some reason. Because of this, most dealers don't accept special orders on Japanese built vehicles. The only exception I know to this in Southern CA is Carson Toyota's Internet department.
Because of the difficulty and hassle, most dealerships will not negotiate very hard. I'm actually surprised at the $1000 over invoice figure. My advise would be to take that IF you have confidence that they will actually process the order. Paying a few dollars more to an honorable dealership is worth the money in the case of a build order. Otherwise, you are likely to get a call in 6 weeks telling your the truck has arrived only to discover it isn't what you wanted. Does it sound like I've heard this one before?
Make sure you are talking to someone who is well informed on the ordering process. Here in the Chicago region we are not able to special order 4Runners until further notice. Maybe you are ordering a model that is available elsewhere, and not a specific built-to-order unit.
Just make sure things are crystal clear, otherwise your salesperson will call you in three months and say "we can't get what you want"
Good Luck !!!
Steve
Yes I'm concerned about ordering, but vanity/money is not the only reason for not wanting some options (I won't go into details here), but if anyone can find a 4wd sport in cali w/o a sunroof, let me know! BTW, why the hell are the 'options' called options when every vehicle i've seen has the exact same configuration! I mean not EVERY california is some yuppy family person who buys hummer's to go to starbucks. Some of us actually want to go offroad and want 4wd without all the useless bells and whistles. Okay, no more complaining.. sorry. Thanks for all you guy's help.
-Jared
(1) for everyone looking for a much better car than the 3rd gen Runner, this is it! Power even in the V-6 is exorbitant - this is a sport-ROCKET vehicle, not an SUV. Mileage though is worse than my '90 V-6...about 18 mpg in 1200 miles of driving. I ran it on 87 octane because that is what the dealership folks said to do - no problem at all. Passenger space is way better than the old ones, front and back. And inside is quiet, quiet, quiet.
Also, it FINALLY has rear discs, and I thought the braking was excessively good too. I am not a big fan of the new HVAC design - I prefer rotary dials - but it works really well. Steering is much quicker than the old ones - it seemed to be about 3 turns lock to lock. My favorite feature: that starter thing...now you start it like a Prius - simply turn the key and let go even if it is still cranking - it will quit as soon as the engine fires.
(2) I will never own one of these - the reviews 50 posts back talking about its off-road "prowess" have clearly never been offroad. The thing is WAY too heavy - I am talking several hundred pounds. Where the previous ones let you know where the wheels were and what kind of traction you had, the new ones feel completely numb - no road or ground feel at all. It is also noticeably lower - rampover is shot vs the previous ones, and also the departure angle is terrible - I managed to scrape the bumper going up a steep driveway, for goodness sake. The 4-8 degrees it has been reduced from the previous Runners has made all the difference.
My feeling is that since the highlander is kind of an in-between size vs the other utes on the market (smaller than Pilot, bigger than CRV), and since it is in the primary money-making segment of the SUV market, and finally because it is still several years to the next HL revamp, Toyota decided to make the Runner into a mainstream soccer-parent model so as not to lose the customers, especially to Honda. I have driven the Pilot, and if I were in the market for a soft-roader, 4Runner is the way better choice, except for real-world gas mileage.
Just for laughs I took my '90 Runner out to a couple of forest service tracks to check out where there were clearance and traction challenges (the '90 could drive the whole route without a problem), then repeated the same route in the '03. The new one repeatedly scraped and actually ground out a couple of times before I was halfway through. In the interests of not messing up a brand new vehicle (300 miles on the odo at that point), I chose to turn back. And my '90 is pretty much stock, with the larger stock tires.
I would think any SERIOUS offroad stuff like desert sand would be a major problem in the 4th gen just because of weight alone - I would not want to take it onto sand at all.
There are few choices left in SUV-dom for offroaders, and it was nice that Runner was one of them up until last year. Oh well. In every other way, this is a much much nicer everyday driver than the older ones were. They should make a TRD street suspension package for it, and make XREAS standard across the line.
2014 Mini Cooper (stick shift of course), 2016 Camry hybrid, 2009 Outback Sport 5-spd (keeping the stick alive)
What would consider better offroad '03 vehicles in the same price range or lower?
The only other's I looked at were the Jeep Grand Cherokee and the Jeep Rubicon. My major complaints are their service records and the fact that there is NO room in these things. I don't know about everyone else, but I personally go offroading with a couple of friends and all our gear, and personally I wouldn't ask my enemy to sit in the back of a grand cherokee. And the rubicon, as wonderful offroad as it is, I can't imagine having it for anything other than a sole offroad vehicle, and if I had the money to buy one truck for hauling gear, and another for just going offroad, I would just get a 50k hummer h2. Seriously, if you have any other suggestions I'd like to know. Because when considering all aspects including cost and room, the 4runner sport looks about the best you can get for under $35k.
-Jared
I was thinking not just of the Jeeps, but also possibly a Land Rover, which would be in roughly the price territory of the new Runner...and laugh if you will, but I would not be adverse to at least checking out the Touareg when it arrives, although it is unibody with IRS.
The only other option I can think of right off the bat is Xterra, and I have not had the chance to really check that out yet. It is a full-frame truck which would be about the same price with the supercharged engine and offroad tires, PLUS you can get a manual and it has a low-range. I do not know how offroad-ready it is when it is stock though.
2014 Mini Cooper (stick shift of course), 2016 Camry hybrid, 2009 Outback Sport 5-spd (keeping the stick alive)
-Jared
P.S. Taking a rental car up forest service roads really makes me feel bad for that dealer. 300 miles, but offroad damage makes me think that they won't rent you another car.
Steve, Host
As far as scraping the bumper, that was early on, and it scraped underneath on the asphalt. It came as a total surprise to me, I didn't expect that to happen in an SUV, especially a Runner. I got more careful after that.
So don't feel too bad for the TRAC folks! When I picked up that particular truck, it only had 15 miles on it, and since I returned it, no-one seems to want to rent it, so it looks kind of forlorn just sitting there(I drive by there on my way to work). OTOH, the last of their '02 Runners are moving over to the used car lot in the next couple of weeks...it kind of has me thinking... :-)
(the kind of thoughts that always cost me more than I can afford!)
2014 Mini Cooper (stick shift of course), 2016 Camry hybrid, 2009 Outback Sport 5-spd (keeping the stick alive)
nippononly - Too heavy... the Disco is very heavy, with less power and does quite well. It too has a short breakover angle.
4200 (V6) & 4400 lbs. (V8) isn't too bad for a vehicle its size.
I agree the Runner should have remained at 11" instead of dropping it to 9.1" of clearance. What were they thinking!
The real reason for not doing out of state exchanges is the cost of transportation. They literally must have it sent on a flat bed which can cost over $1000. You would be better off flying to a place like Colorado and driving it home.
How am I so certain of all of this? Because I've sold three cars to CA residents who flew to Virginia and drove home. One was a Tundra and I had to find a CA emission truck for him. Another was a used T100 and used cars have different requirements. The last one was a 2000 Land Cruiser that I had shipped. The LC is a 50 state vehicle and there was no problems other than a screw up at the New Jersey based transport company.
Here is how you would handle buying out of state: Pay for the car either by check of finance. Get a set of temporary tags. You will not pay the sales or title tax to the state it is purchased in. You will be sent a "Certificate of Origin" once your check clears. Take that to the CA DMV and pay the sales tax for CA at that point. A title will be given to you if you paid cash or will be sent to the lien holder listed on the CO. Its that easy which is why your CA dealer tried to get you off it.
Got to go where you get the best deal (within reason) and then plan a mini vacation:)
In case you are wondering, no, we don't get the Sport model here without a moonroof so there isn't a chance of Jared doing the same. Colorado is probably his best bet.
I checked the following regions and found none: Portland, Denver, Kansas City, San Francisco, Los Angeles.
Best of luck with the Special Order, but I wouldn't hold my breath.
Steve
BTW, I still had one question, has anyone seen or had the double-decker cargo shelf option? I thought it was just a board of sorts that sits on the wheel-well, but someone on the other thread alluded to not being able to remove it, is this true? I can't find any at the dealership to check it out.